Auto Suggestions are available once you type at least 3 letters. Use up arrow (for mozilla firefox browser alt+up arrow) and down arrow (for mozilla firefox browser alt+down arrow) to review and enter to select.

Overview

The Coach: Winning at Personal Finance is a simple yet powerful and beneficial book for those wanting to improve their personal and family finances. It is densely packed with fundamental defensive money management techniques, including establishing the all-important emergency fund, eliminating debt, and preparing for retirement by becoming financially independent. These money-management techniques, along with eight others, are shared by the Coach, David G. Giese. The educational process used by David aligns the eleven proven financial techniques with each of the eleven defensive positions on a football field. The theme in the book is that wealth is achieved by what you save and invest, not by what you earn.

Though money management is complex, let's remind ourselves of some basics of the topic. David believes that we all want two things when it comes to money. One, we want to enjoy today, our lifestyle, and the things money can purchase. Two, we know someday we want to stop earning and have enough money to carry us throughout retirement. The interesting challenge about those two universal desires is that one objective pulls from the other. Therein lies the challenge.

The keys to successfully navigating those two desires around money are balance, discipline, and fundamental money-management techniques that David shares in this book.

To have money for our future, we have to save some today. Thus, we have to spend less than we earn. Invest in this book and learn how you can achieve both a pleasant lifestyle today as well as financial independence in your future.

It's the Changing of the Guards! It is apparent that the 21st Century is faced
with new challenges that has affected every market, culture, and even spheres of influence. Does God have a plan for the nations, and those who ...

Inspired to write about David's past because she knew who she was and he didn't.
She discovered that the night she met him forty-three years ago. All he knew about himself was that he was adopted at the age of ...

An initial reading of this collection could suggest that primarily hate motivates these writings. Further
thought may generate the question: what is hated? The answer is that the author hates what threatens what he loves. Then it is seen that ...

With the kingdom finally secure, King Locke is summoned to the coast for what may
be a new threat. The past catches up with the king as well, and once again the Surin Knights are called to defend all they ...

Master Mac spans three generations of high-achieving men and women who changed not only their
own but many other pieces of the world. Despite differences in ages and backgrounds, they were linked by what McBurney had taught them. That linkage ...

In the first tale of the Ornaments, follow along with Annabell as she journeys to
the top of the Christmas tree. Prepare to meet wonderful new characters and discover amazing enchanted lands that exist within your own tree! Join Annabell ...

Harry Rider, private detective, is just trying to get by. He has regular clients for
background checks, the occasional missing person or find a long lost relative, but nothing like this. He is thrust into a world he had only ...

Meet Taylor Made, who has heard all the jokes - good, bad and awful. In
her typical week, Taylor has to deal with grouchy bears, a best mate who was born ninety years too late and keeps winning 'the name ...